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What tabletop games need to win the parents of tomorrow
Will board games need to adapt to win over the parents of tomorrow? Gamewright’s Jason Schneider discusses the future of tabletop gaming.
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What draws the line between play and competition
From blood doping to high-altitude training, how will our views on performance enhancement change in the future? Synthetic biology pioneer George Church explains.
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[WEBINAR] What the Future: Play
The future of play faces multiple inflection points, most often driven by technology. Factors from climate change and increasing emphasis on competition over fun and fairness could spawn new ways to play or kill traditional ones.
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What the Future: Work
Revisit our foresight webinar featuring new data and interviews with industry experts about the future of work – and its impact on the way we live.
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Ipsos Experts & Guest Speakers
Read bios for our expert speakers for the evening from across Ipsos Strategy 3, as well as our special Guest Speaker from the New York Times
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Revisit Video Presentation
Ipsos experts together with David Rubin, Chief Marketing and Communications Officer, New York Times will present an illuminating fireside chat exploring the issues that should be on every policymaker and CMO’s mind
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Work
Companies have two big questions about the future of work: What will the implications be for their workforce and what will those effects mean for their customers? For the workforce, will new models — accelerated by the pandemic — emerge? Or will they revert to the old ways? Either way, the changes to how we live, shop, dine, and play could be profound.
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How changes to the way we work will impact how we live
Matt Carmichael, editor of What the Future, sees a key tension between the desire to transform the workplace and the urge to “return to normal.” The future of work, he thinks, could look much like the present.
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How the future of work could look like the present
The pandemic forced workers online, but it didn’t transform the way we work, says AWS’s Jon Izenstark. The real change will be what comes next.
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Why empathy is the answer to shifting customer expectations
Restaurants are competing with apps and websites for attention — but humanity and hospitality can give them an edge, says Darden Restaurants’ Ali Charri.